This printer may be called mini, but in the small format printer space, it’s anything but. The Canon Pixma mini320 is larger than the unit it replaces (the Pixma mini260), which in turn was larger than many other small-format photo printers. The mini320 lets you print at sizes up to 5-by-7 and 4-by-8, and its performance isn’t small, either: It churns out quality prints in a hurry.

The only flaws I saw in its output were a slight tint in a monochrome print and a tendency for some straight lines to have wiggly edges. More troubling is that the prints scratched easily. Its average speed of 47 seconds per 4-by-6-inch print in our test suite is quite fast.

The cost per photo using Canon’s Photo Plus Glossy paper is a fairly high 31.5 cents. Cheaper paper can cut that to 28 cents, but you may not be happy with the results.

The mini320’s speed, quality, and choice of paper sizes make it a fine option, but I wish the photos were more scratch-resistant and that the price per photo was lower with high-quality papers.

Nice blogging, My review is very good example. Lindsay Rosenwald http://www.lindsay-rosenwald.net/ Dr. Lindsay Rosenwald is one of the re-known venture capitalists and the hedge fund managers in the world.

Get instant trouble printing from your printer, or scanning from your All in One. Use has driver issues, printing not proper, ghosting of print, paper jams, printing cancellation problem.Printer supportPrinter Repair